Good morning, this is Tucson Local Pulse for Saturday, January tenth, twenty twenty six.
We wake up today under a hard chill. The National Weather Service keeps freeze warnings in place across much of southern Arizona this morning, so we bundle up if we are out early on Speedway, Grant, or Oracle. According to The Watchers weather service update, temperatures dip near or below freezing in parts of the metro, but we warm into the mid 50s this afternoon with clear skies and a cold, calm evening ahead.
Overnight, we have a tragic traffic update on the west side. News 4 Tucson reports one person dies after a high speed single car crash off I 10 near Prince Road, when a vehicle leaves the road and hits a barrier wall. Deputies with Pima County Sheriff’s Department are investigating, and we may see some lingering slowdowns around that interchange as the scene clears.
In city and county news, the debate over big data centers known as Project Blue continues. Arizona Public Media reports the state attorney general is challenging a special electric rate deal for the proposed Amazon linked data centers, raising questions about water use and power costs for all of us. At the same time, Governor Hobbs signals she wants to roll back a tax incentive that helps recruit data centers, which could reshape Tucson’s tech growth.
From Pima County, we have a couple of dates for our calendars. County officials say tickets are now on sale for Governor Katie Hobbs’ twenty twenty six Governor’s State Report at the Tucson Convention Center ballroom on January twenty first, a chance to hear about jobs, housing, and water policy that affect our daily lives. The County also announces a big career fair at the Kino Event Center on East Ajo Way in mid February, with county departments recruiting for hundreds of public service jobs, many starting around the mid forty thousand dollar range.
On the neighborhood level, the County’s Green Geek column reminds us that the City of Tucson’s TreeCycle program runs through January nineteenth, with drop off sites across town so we can recycle our Christmas trees into mulch. They also host a cooking grease collection event today, including a site at the Agua Nueva facility off West Calle Agua Nueva, helping keep grease out of our pipes and turning it into biodiesel.
Our schools continue to shine. In the Vail School District, Senita Valley Elementary on East Bilby Road has its National Elementary Honor Society students raising funds this week for PACC, supporting pets in need across Pima County. Parents across Tucson can also look ahead to the Tucson School Fair on January twenty fourth at the Childrens Museum downtown on South Sixth Avenue, where more than thirty schools share options from STEM programs to arts focused campuses.
Culturally, downtown feels lively tonight. Those new murals celebrating Tucsons two hundred fiftieth anniversary continue to draw visitors along Congress Street and Scott Avenue, and local venues near the Rialto and Club Congress host a mix of indie rock, cumbia, and jazz for those braving the evening chill.
In sports, our Arizona Wildcats basketball teams host key conference games at McKale Center this weekend, with traffic building along Campbell and Sixth Street before tipoff. Local high school winter sports roll on as well, with district championships approaching later this month.
On the public safety side, Tucson Police and Pima County Sheriff’s deputies report no major violent incidents overnight beyond the fatal west side crash, but we still see the usual car break ins around apartment complexes near Kolb and Broadway and along Irvington. Officers remind us to lock vehicles, remove valuables, and use porch lights and cameras where possible.
For a feel good note, shelters report that Operation Freeze, a city network of warming centers around Tucson, opens again this weekend, offering hot drinks and a safe indoor space for our unhoused neighbors as temperatures drop. Volunteers from churches along North Campbell and community groups near Santa Rita Park step up with blankets, coats, and meals, a reminder that we get through these cold snaps together.
We wrap up with our quick outlook. We stay cold this morning, sunny and cool this afternoon, then another freeze likely tonight, so we protect plants, pets, and pipes.
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